Anti-Drone Movement Grows

Anti-Drone Movement Grows

A friend of mine once called Las Vegas “the Lourdes of America.” People come looking for a miracle, but it’s the casinos that mostly cash in. This doesn’t stop the 36 million pilgrims who travel annually to this neon oasis, searching for some indefinable fulfillment, away from home, untethered from their habitual routines and inhibitions, a little off-balance, spending money like the water that is rapidly disappearing in this overbuilt desert.

Las Vegas always feels a little like Wall Street on steroids—or is it the other way around? This past Saturday, October 8, more that 1,000 people made this point intentionally or not as they brought the Occupy movement to the Strip. Setting off from the New York New York casino, they voiced a common frustration at the deepening economic inequality in the United States and the increasing financial pain in their city, where the home foreclosure calamity grows daily.

This demonstration, like those spreading across America in over 1,300 cities, sharpened one facet of the crisis we face today.

Two protests the next morning highlighted another one.

Peace and justice advocates caravanned north from Las Vegas along Interstate 95 on Sunday, October 9 to take action together at the Nevada National Security Site (formerly the Nevada Test Site) and Creech Air Force Base, which operates drone aircraft being used around the world.

In the 1980s and 1990s, thousands of people traveled to the Nevada Test Site to call for an end to nuclear weapons testing at a site where 928 nuclear bombs had been detonated above and below ground. In one ten-day stretch in 1988, for example, 8,000 people crossed the line and were cited for trespass. (In the early days of the protests, Nye County meted out jail sentences of a few weeks to several months to arrestees. After a year or two, it found this too expensive, and in most cases issued citations that were never acted on.)

These actions played an important role in creating the political conditions for the passage of the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty, which most nations have signed. (While the US has never signed this treaty, it has maintained a moratorium on conducting a nuclear test that goes to “full criticality.”) However, the newly renamed site continues to “support the country’s nuclear weapons programs, has a mandate to restart full-scale nuclear bomb tests within two years if so ordered by the President, and receives and stores radioactive waste on land that belongs to the Western Shoshone Nation,” as Nevada Desert Experience coordinator Jim Haber reports.

On Sunday, after an interfaith service at the entrance to the Nevada National Security Site, 59 women and men crossed into this top-secret facility and were arrested and cited by Nye County Sheriffs. After they were released, many of them traveled some thirty miles to Creech, where 18 were arrested by Clark County police.

“It is a thing of great beauty to see people peacefully blocking the entrance to the Creech Air Force Base, speaking a quiet but thundering ‘NO!’ to the drones delivering death around the world,” my Pace e Bene Nonviolence Service colleague Peter Ediger said, reflecting on his experience at the protest.

Unlike officials at the test site, Creech and Clark County authorities have prosecuted those risking arrest at the drones facility. Last January, Las Vegas Judge William Jensen found 14 anti-drone activists guilty of trespass at Creech but then sentenced them to time served. This verdict stemmed from a nonviolent witness at the base in April 2009. The trial had been held in September 2010, but the judge ruled that he needed to take three months to consider the protesters’ claim that their action met the test of the “necessity defense.”

The Occupiers in Las Vegas and all over the country stand in a venerable tradition of “occupations,” including the innumerable nonviolent occupations by peace activists of the Nevada Test Site since the early 1980s. Like many of the new occupiers, those who have taken action in the Nevada desert over the past three decades have also called for a reordering of economic priorities that privilege military spending and give short shrift to human needs.

But an even more fundamental value that ties this long-time tradition to the emerging movement against financial inequality is the adamant commitment to the infinite worth of every human being.

If that infinite worth is ignored, threatened, or attacked (because of the economic injustice of unemployment, the increasingly technologized terror that modern war and weapons represents, or the inextricable connection between the two, where a martial society means money for war and not for the things that make for life) then determined and compassionate action must follow.

Such action will include challenging Wall Street’s gambling addiction—with its roulette tables and slot machines where only a few of us win—and the national security state where the stakes are even higher.

This will be a long and arduous process, and will take nothing less than a thoroughgoing transformation, within and without. But, like those crossing the line at Creech—and those finding their new “occupations”—each of us can embark on this powerful and demanding pilgrimage of deep and fundamental change.

Ken Butigan is director of Pace e Bene, a nonprofit organization fostering nonviolent change through education, community and action. He also teaches peace studies at DePaul University and Loyola University in Chicago.

Further

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